Filters

Pearls of Weber

A collection of posts by David Weber containing background information for his stories, collected and generously made available Joe Buckley.

Posted by David at 12:00am

What happened to Erewhon's League Membership?

Series: Honorverse

Date: October 22, 2002

Erewhon never had "League membership" in the sense of being a voting member of the Solarian League. What Erewhon, and several other junction termini star systems, had was a special treaty relationship with the League, a sort of NATO membership. As a general practice, these single-star polities are considered to have
League "membership" because they receive technical infrastructure support, very
favorable economic relationships, and mutual defense military treaties with the League.
The League would prefer outright annexation of all star systems at the far end of wormhole
junctions which connect to League territory, but several things mitigate against this. One
is that the League's own foreign policy makers are prone to divisions and internal
squabbling (remember; the vast majority of League citizens are rather like the majority of
present-day U.S. citizens. As long as there are no other superpowers, as long as the
economy is strong, and as long as the rest of the world leaves them alone, their primary
concerns are domestic, and foreign policy is often seen as irrelevant or even as a
distraction from issues of "real" importance.) Another reason the League doesn't
go around annexing everyone in sight is that single-star polities like Erewhon realize
perfectly well that they can get more out of the League by remaining independent and
requiring constant "courting" than they could get as one more League member,
submerged in the great morass of other members and no longer provided with a special
status to secure advantageous treatment. What happened in Erewhon's case, however, was
that the Erewhonese's ability to get special concessions from the League fell afoul of the
League's fundamental pacifism. As the People's Republic kept aggressively expanding in
their direction they became--just as the Legislaturalists had feared might
happen--apprehensive about what the Peeps might have in mind for them. But
whereas the Peeps had been afraid that the League might actually honor its treaty
obligations and act militarily if the Republic went after Erewhon, the Erewhonese had what
they considered to be mounting evidence that the League would not act to preserve
Erewhon's independence if that meant war with the PRH, and especially not if the Peeps
offered the League a sweetheart deal for accepting new ownership of the wormhole terminus.
(This evidence consisted of the League's failure to support Erewhon's protests as the
Peeps nibbled away at star systems between them and Erewhon, and--to be completely
honest--was also the result of some very adroit Manticoran diplomacy... and quite a few
"black ops," including some Erewhon still doesn't know a thing about.) As a
result, the relationship which obtained at the time of On Basilisk Station was
actually already in a steady state of decay (although few outside observers realized
that), and Erewhon eventually decided to throw in with the Manticoran Alliance. Roland
Green's story in Worlds of Honor will deal, tangentially, at least, with
Manty-Erewhonese relations during this period of change but prior to Erewhon's joining the
Alliance.